Re: Topband: details about the WFAN skywave plot (Correction)

2015-02-15 Thread Richard Fry

CORRECTION:  See FCC §73.190 at the link below, not FCC §73.189 (sorry).

FCC methodology and formulae used to determine the skywave signals
of AM broadcast stations:

http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CFR-2012-title47-vol4/pdf/CFR-2012-title47-vol4-sec73-190.pdf 


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Re: Topband: details about the WFAN skywave plot

2015-02-15 Thread Richard Fry
... So I would expect the skywave plot to be elongated to the east through 
south at the 0.25 mV/m contour line. It appears that the data was generated 
using a signal strength prediction program as "50% of the time" was used in 
the qualifying remarks (50% implies a median value - which likely comes 
from our monthly median model of the ionosphere).  But the prediction 
program didn't look at ground around the antenna.


The link below leads to the FCC methodology and formulae used to determine 
the skywave signals of AM broadcast stations.


http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CFR-2012-title47-vol4/pdf/CFR-2012-title47-vol4-sec73-189.pdf 


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Topband: details about the WFAN skywave plot

2015-02-14 Thread Carl Luetzelschwab
The E region critical frequency at night is around 0.45 MHz. That says any
elevation angle less than about 45 degrees at 660 KHz does not get through
the E region. The skywave plot showing the 0.25 mV/m RMS field strength
contour line is for a one-hop E mode at a distance of around 1150 km at an
elevation angle of about 6 degrees. Shorter distances from WFAN are still
an E mode, until ground wave takes over.

The question comes down to "how far out from the antenna does ground impact
an elevation angle of 6 degrees?" Al K3LC did a study of this on 160m, 80m
and 40m using vertical monopoles, and presented his results in the
September/October 2006 issue of NCJ. From his work, we can extrapolate his
data (with some caution) - and it looks like ground is important out to
about 2.2 wavelengths at 6 degrees elevation, which is just over a half
mile on 660 KHz. That puts 'ground' to the east through south out in the
Long Island Sound and out in the Atlantic Ocean.

So I would expect the skywave plot to be elongated to the east through
south at the 0.25 mV/m contour line. It appears that the data was generated
using a signal strength prediction program as "50% of the time" was used in
the qualifying remarks (50% implies a median value - which likely comes
from our monthly median model of the ionosphere). But the prediction
program didn't look at ground around the antenna.

Carl K9LA
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